The Denison Herald (Denison, Tex.), No. 122, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 18, 1921 Page: 3 of 13
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’S i)EBT
WITH CHARITY
:
«n thay »t-
Hotb Wr*r»*
aaiuAiED "woodless’ moon, cauiic
CHILD* a UCAUSEAMERICA SOI FOOD TO
TU STARVIHCV1EHHESE.
I
I
I
Bite;
w
U
■ :
m
. t
U'*
B#;
Wi'
ilitp
Ltwa, faaaous Auatriaa
or wthaywue •urgeon, at
,t*M m* of It mm & in Now Tort
;C*tjr bolding flea clinics to show his
jgratitude to the United States tor the
bote Americans gave to his native land
kftsr the war. Thought It bas been
ruled by the State of New York that
* ha can no longer operate himself with-
* out seeming« state certificate he Is
net hindered from giving personal in-
struction Despite the animosity
aroused by end between contemporary
surgeons who use the knife and who
are onward to the flree clinics, In.
Lorens continue* |© alleviate the pain
and deformities of hundreds of crip-
plea
ffhr, Lorygw legped Into fame In the
Western Hemisphere when h#
straightenP& the body- of Miss Lolit
Armour, daughter of Phillip Da r forth
Armour, the rrreat pafekinr house king
of C:nk‘sro. In a visit to the United
States in 1882 He was already known
In Europe It ts said of him, “After
a distinguished enreecuas a student at
Vienna^ university he was graduated
in !8su, anil Suhse<tuefflly became pro-
fessor in surgery there. In 1&95 Pro-
fessor Lpreax published a treatise on
* Dteloctrtiwr"Wr~mw-H!p" and hi"
method rereiypd the apvrobation of the
Berlin Medici) Congress the same year.
He vfflted the United State* in 1902.
and father demonstrated his method
of bloodies* reduction "
RecMMlp ew «----r •*—‘' -1 to leave
the United Btate* because many of his
• ‘nteifiporarie* hftd snubbed him. hut
then ha AauMMUlft..stay and continue
i» conduct his free clinic* (saying. Til
stfcy if they don’t throw me out." Also,
"Whether l go borne to Vienna or stay
and do what I can I* entirely up to
the Wealth commissioner of New
Tfark.", ,
When Health Commlasioner Cope-
latld whs told of this he Wild that he
would see to it that Dr. T/Oren* would
remain. lie *a’d Tn"f he would call
together a group of orthopedic sur-
geons and map ou^ a channel for the
Austrian visitor's* activities that would
shield him Item exploitation and In-
sure warm and proper co-operation.
Wrongfully Exploited.
*He ha* brought to the surface
thousands of cripple* ana other suffer-
ers in New fork, hundreds of whom
can be helped* by treatment.” said Dr.
Copeland "It has been magniftcient
Work, but Dr, Urrm has been ex-
plolted by wrongful person* and we
shall see that It does not happen
again.” And tt ie true enough, magnf- BRYAN AND OAK CLIFF MEET IN
fieient work Hundreds of deformed TITLE CONTEST,
hoys and. ^*e„pow resgmjF
lega arms and hlp£ WhlctfSaC^ j
the
Cincinnati were easy wl
tempted to steal bases,
thrown sat stealing 22 tfames
New Tart batted In the most run*.
748, and also received the most wa’k*.
488. One reason why tha Philadelphia
Phillies finished . la. the cellar: They
' struck out the most liases, *t&. The
j Reds were the slowest on W hasss.
being thrown out so iaas than 1#*
ed at the etatien by a dsiegstleo *u
citizens headed by representative of ] time* during the sseson.
the Oak Cliff CommerrlsI ass<>* tstion.
They arc a husky bunch of younxeter*.
and Coaeh Charflr Hudson announced
that they su>- in the pink of condition.
None of the men arc banfilcappcd wilh
injuries. The trip to Dallas ru a
5 NATIONAL LEAGUERS
HIT IN OVER 100 RUNS
her baby’s milk. Even when a child
looks flit and well nourished, its food (comparatively comfortable one and th
ay be lacking in certain constituents, squad is full of i onftdenc*
the absence of which will cause de- j
form tty.”
“A mother must always hope and
love her child. Her hope must send
her to the doctors, Instead of fatalis-
tically accepting her child** malforma-
tion, an must keep alive the courage
and cheerfulness of the little one. Or-
thopedic surgery had done wonderful
things in the Inst twenty years—many
of the wonders have been performed
by American surgeons—and It is ad-
vancing all the time.”
Dr. Lerens A Fear Man.
Though Dr. Lorens is n poor man,
that Is. comparatively poor to what
he was before the war, he Is giving
the clinics free and even on hi* pre-
Olub records on runs hatte 1 In. bases
on halt:*, strikeouts end out rtraltnq:
Club- Q. RBL HH.
New York . . .T5t TW *88 >
Ht. Louis .....164 138 383 *
Hasten ........ 162 488 377 4
UiUniiurgb lit 8?3 841 !!
Chicago .......168 6l)8 |43 1
ltr*#oklyn .....162 684 32." 4
Philadelphia ..184078 W4 «
Cincinnati ....IS* 66*) 376 2
DECISION OVER
i
GEORGE BURNS FOR THIRD TIME
LED IN BABE ON BALLS.
I
vious visit here when he cured Miss
Armour of her deformity, he refused
an offer of hundreds of thousands of
dollars from Mr. Armour.
The clinics are being held In various
parte of the city of New Tort and ad-
vance notice Is given when the great
surgeon win be at the place. Scores
and scores of cripples on crutches, in
wheel chairs, canes wait for hours for
hls approach hoping that they will
get the first ticket. Tickets are passed
out among the cripples and they are
called hy number. Dr. Loren* works
as long as he can He even carried on
his work despite the fact that he faint-
ed twice within an hour one dgy. He
ha* a curve of assistants whom he
directs and leaves directions as to how
the patient Shall be cared for until the
plaster case Is removed.
The operations with which his name
Is associated, consists, first. |n the
forcible rupture of such parts as resist
reduction under an anaesthetic; and,
second, in fixing and retaining the
limb In proper position In a plaster
case for several months.—C. R D.
George Burns, the ‘sly old fox" of
the New York National*' outfield, has
thoroughly established himself as the
most difficult man for National
League hurlers to pitch to. The world
champions' gardner for the third sea-
son led in the number of bases on
bails, according to official miscellan-
eous records given out today. Burns
was walked 88 times during the pest
season.
In 7838 no National League player
succeeded In batting in 104 runs. In
1821 five scored more than 108 runs
with their hits. Kogers Hornsby, the
scintillating Cardinal, led the league
He batted In 128 runs. George K»lly
of the world champions was a close
second, with 122. Ross Young and
Frank Frisch of the Giants, and Aus-
tin McHenry of the St. Louis Cardi-
nal* were the other players to hit In
over 108 runs.
Raymond Powell of Boston was easy
Mr the pitchers. The Brave whiffed
IS times during the season. HU cap-
taia, South worth, was a hard man for
the hurlers to fool. He struck out but
thirteen times In 141 games, which U
Quite A record. Jacques Fournier at
PRESS VEBDICT FAVORS ST. PAUL
FLASH IN 19-ROUNO BOUT.
«. Paul, Dec. 17.-M»ke iMbbuna
pugilistic star, was on the a*ec®d'£r
- a«»U today as the result of Msi »£•
<H torv over Mike 0'l>>wd. termer mlddlo-
*' I weight champion, in a
’•"'' decision bout here last night. Under
“ the Minnesota laws a referee’s d,-ct-
?,T 'skm is not allowed but most <* U
”3' sports writers at the ringside were of
'““the opinion that Oibb-ms outpointed
’20 the "Hurp.”
1 Negotiations are under way Tor a
JOIE RAY 0FFTHE TRACK St
CHAMPION MILER FORCED OUT
•Y INJURY. ^ johnnv Wilson present holder
- of the middleweight crown, which he
Chicago, Dec. 17,-Jolc Kay, eham- t0(,k from O'Dowd. The l'hi.ntom*
ptem sailer, who Ml a mark of 4:14 8-5 mansg»r has wired Tex Rickard pro-
at Philadelphia in 1818, has retired motpr cf New York, in an effort to ar-
from the track. It was announced here ranffe A meeting with Wilson.
Kay's leg. injured at the Olympic I Receipts totalled $23,782 of which
race* in Antwerp, has never completely oibbon'a and O'Dowd will
responded to treatment, John Behr. ,Hghtly more than 88,000 each,
trainer ef the Illinois Athletic club, j Thc total receipts were second only
said, forcing the little cnampton to t0 thoge, 0f the first clash between
- Consult Us^tey* Th#**
B. WILLIFORD
GENERAL INSURANCE
issr&tfr.
lumber that!
WR YEAR
la quaUty lumber-la
8rom splits and
bole* and toughn
mw, piaae. chisel i
In. Lumber that a_
and fine and takes*
and varnish to perf*
8»t that grads of m
deffeeach
“SUDDEN SEP
WO W. Nelson
receive
quit.
Ray has been
miter six times.
I the 'two' St; Paul "Mflcei" lnKo**™-
ehampioa bpr jjts wi,en O'Dowd was given the
majority of newspaper decisions.
WATSON’S "GALLOWS" WAS
PROBABLY UNLOADING CRANE
Minneapolis, Dec. IT—William P.
Cowles, an engineer, who
major in the American expeditionary
forces, in a statement to a local news-
paper published today, said he had
recognized a picture of a ®*rs
furnished by Senator Thomas Watson
In support bf the latter's charge* or
A. arttrwrtldtt tnfwrod. jVholcRnle executions In the A. R F-. as
Waco. Dec. 17.—Mose Westbrook, that of a crane he had constructed
ths A. and M, cadet who was injured while In France.
In cavalry drill at Cfblletc Station We had to have some means of un-
Thursday was brought to the Baptist loading gasoline tanks from cars, sn B
sanitarium here last night. An X-ray Mr. Cowles. "1 constructed this beam
examination disclosed concussion of j hy means of which the tanks were UTi -
the brain but no fracture. He had not ,ed from the cars by a rope and oc-
Postpone Roma's Trip.
Washington Dte. 17.- Flans to bring
America's largest airship the Roma,
from Langley Field to Washington to-
day on her first cruising flight were
abandoned today after receipt by the
army air service of wort that thc en-
gines of the craft had developed some
minor troubles that made the flight
inadvisable.
Low operating cost
e
North Texas Motor Ci
619-621W. Main St.
regained consciousness this morning. * posited on a platform."
Sf ■ Jh
BOTH HIGH CONTENDERS
CONFIDENT OF VICTORY
iLtrnf-hu
■trafc'rtt
Maned.
a* nflturV intefadqd them
when they come out they shall he nor-
mal as they were Intended.
In art Interview with Msrquette
Moores Marshall of the New Tork
Evening World. Dr l^»ronz said. “My
message to mothers of crippled ehll-
dr«n is this: 'llo not procrastinate’
Do not condemn your baby to a life-
time of deformity and weakness
through your own delay and neglect
In seeking the treatment that would
cure It. Without questions, a large
majority of ehltd if ripples can be com-
f^etelv jmrtd, UE.£T£&1 ly helped If tliclr
rases are taken In time."
Miss Marshall continues, “His mel-
low voice stressing every word of hi*
beautiful spoken English, the noble
head Lent slk-htlr so that the Intent
blue eyes might meet mine two of
the cleverest finger* In thc world laid
In light empbast* on the sleeve cf my
••oat. <Dr. Adolf 4*>renx. fammt* Vien-
nese orthooedlc surgeon, gav.* for New
Tork mothers and Incident'* for all
mothers everywhere, this ringlsg re-
minder of their duty and tlielr op-
portnnily" _
"The saddest *{ranxe«t thlee T have
seen in America” he recently said “is
the number of nnnere<>«arv er!np!*«.
the number of deformities that mlrrhf
have beer cured years ago by Ameri-
can surreoos"
Neglect Makes Cripples
Then when asked. "Then will you
not emphasize, the obligation ihui rest*
on mother of crippled children to *se
tliat they receive treatment In ume?”
l>e replied, "in time, tltst is tt»e mod
important point to make. I cannot
understand the latmitOd'C, tta indiffer-
ence which has *urrvtitu!e<> ma .y of
ths cripples in America—uroil it i* toe
let* It hi something When 1 canto!
explain. i
“Congenital defects, such a* con*
gratUl eiabfoot osngenifl ftlytne.-tt.'on
of ths hip. can and abto»l. be correct •
ed as soon as (Uncovered. It i* only
after painful opera'5-v, that ciub foot
eaa be helped after the age of six
years. At the *** of two or three
week* It Ij so simp)* the head of a
skilled surgeon «m liciid 'he little foot
tntd ShapW TbwjfsnffWV Vltelori tioa of
tbs hip probohlyjg, rtlacoven-fj *vh''n
the ch-id begins to try to Wa;1 Then
is the time for tlis npwim n When a {]
ths little bone* are soft Urey «*n be put
.into pesiUoR so slmnb-. . ,if the mother
waits till later in life MM'Inisfrwiat-
ties ofter cannot be cured AifoII. and.
in any event, ths spe'eMon f* mu-h
more p*' ful and difficult ”
"The defr,rmtt!e* that are not con- |
genital ffali into two claasc tc, ,*
. sr# due to Occident and the*- att*l- }
Utsble to defects, lu »UBt-rUi<m 't he
mother's doty ss to the first e|r.i* |
UVe her d<»tv In regsrt ’M congenital
defects she should; OTMBH -OB’ Pbr*!- ■
elan prem ttv in order that he m. •
take remrS -f meartr'es."' '
•»fothrr.« have an oven more direct <
r> sponslMlitv In desHng wttb deforml-
l‘es due to defeat, in roiyKton. They
il.oilid prevent saeh deforrnjt‘o» Rick-
ets site rtift"' ewnttNYnfg wm*«dTf>c-
*rt N *>~y-ra *"+4 ttieir children
ff x«iN* ♦<* nurfe from the
~"’v" *houid toko mWllral
•-* the formula
Delias, Dec. 17.—The new athletic
stadium at Fair Park, built to house
championship buttles of every class,
will g«t Its baptism of championship
fire Saturday afternoon at 3 O’clock
when the Green and White team of
Bryan, Texas, High school, clashed
with thp Blue and white of Oak Cliff
High. It I* anticipated aa one of the
stellar football exhibitions of the state
this year, for both chibs are far better
than some of the college teams of the
year Just closing.
Thu local hope* have been carried
along carefully this weex. They have
been at the peak of their form and
Ooacto Allen ha* exercised every care
against stulene** and Injury In these
dosing days of the most strenuous
schedule In the history of the school
Hard practice was gradually closed
down late Thursday. Yesterday the
team trotted through enough forma-
tion* to work out the kinks but were
sent to the showers early nr.d told
to get a good night’s sleep. The sea-
son will be polished off with a short
blackboard talk and then all hands
will stand by for^he battle of the
year at S p. m. *
The Bryan hope* reached thc city
last night and immediately lilvou-
When raw cold winds bbw
DRINK
•f-wrip. I
»■«**«♦ the
imparts a cheering
warmth, valu-
able nutrition
and has a most
delicious fla- L
vor. The very
odorof a steam-
ing cup is ap-
petizing and
attractive. It is absolute-
ly pure and of high grade.
MADE ONLY BY
WALTER BAKER 4 60., LTD.
1 •*. •- pat. 8MNF.
QUALITY
—It's Your Only Value Security
- ,0 NOT DETOUR AWAY FROM QUALITY in
your qu«Bt for L#W$*tices. When you do, you are
off the safe'roadto Value—tremendously near to
the ditch of disappointment. Herd your path is well de-
fined—the height of Quality aX the new lower prices—a
practice in our policy; and adjunct to our purchasing
power; a development of out narrow profit plan.
Only a Few Days Left
Only a few days left and the greatest merchandising movement of the year 1991
will be in hiltary—only a few days left for you to supply yoar needs in Dry
Goods, Clothing. Shoes, Ready-to-Wear and a Thousand and One Practical
Christmas Gift suggestion* at prices affording saving* of the most ih’irwrI
kind. Don’t postpone your buying visit longer—the big Perkin* stoeks are
daily being drawn upon heavier than ever before—each hour you delay your
visit now decrease* your buying privileges—participate HOW in the greatest
sale ever announced by the big chain uf Penkins stores.
mu Broa
i »90nr-*HjJ
TWWVWWWWWWWWWWWWWiWWW,
till,..
r ... a . ' V'' •' •••11 "’’W:'' ;••• •. v
.
■ W’”"....... -H
yV ■■r
Donee Brothms
HOtaa CANS
GIVE A
Wardi
Trui
It makM a ustful
•ith*r lady or g»ntl<
•r b*y. Our
rob* Trunk* *r*
law, yat thay ar*
ity, vary *tr*R| *ni j
and thay hava tv
nianea naadad. |
Maka yaur aalaetioni
dalivar it Christmad
UA LITTLE DOWN ON A BIG BILL"
i***"i'v^^^^«^wwaaw/wwvwvwwvwwwwww
IWWVVWWVVVVI^^ w waa
—We pay off the 1921
Club today.
-The 1922 Club is
now open to new mem-
bers.
—Be one of the initial
members and begin
drawing 4 per cent in-
terest.
CITIZENS STATE Mg
~ — A Guaranty
Fund Bank
You
IN OUR
CHRISTMAS CLUB
next Christmas yeu will have
Kerr Furniture Cd
Ttw start af Fa*ular Frtead Hauea Furni*hi«^
804 WEST MAIN BT.
A FKanf Ad In The Herald Brings
sired Resalts.
■<!* :■ ,.r. • r. ■. ■. V
,. .. ■
EAGLE GROCERY AND MAR
Chandes Owners!
J. 1. Crabtree sad R. Thornton have
Grocery, 119 South Armstrong Avenns. Will carm
piste hue at Staple and Fancy Groceries, togrtbw wg
vegetables and fruit daily. Auto ^ ^
connection. Telephone orders promptly filled
X
TELEPHONE 846
CEBY
Annxtrong
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The Denison Herald (Denison, Tex.), No. 122, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 18, 1921, newspaper, December 18, 1921; Denison, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth572210/m1/3/: accessed May 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .